The Reactions to This Anti-ICE Clown Getting Wrecked by a Flashbang Were Amazing
Yeah, About That Image Regarding the Recent Border Patrol Shooting in Minneapolis...
And That's How You Know That Trump Finds the Minneapolis Situation to Be...
Here's the Other Viral Minnesota Video That Got Leftists Riled Up. It's a...
Was Border Patrol's Gregory Bovino Relieved of Command?
We Have a Pretty Big Mess in Minneapolis, but One Thing Has to...
Did This CNN Guest Really Just Say ICE Is Close to ‘Putting People...
Anti-ICE Mobs Are Doing the Opposite of What Democrats Hoped They Would
A Chicago Teacher Faces Termination for Facebook Comment. Guess What He Said.
Dozens of Anti-ICE Protesters Arrested After Rioting Outside Marriott Hotel
We Just Learned the Biden DOJ Investigated Ilhan Omar's Finances, Too
Kash Patel Says the FBI Will Be Investigating Signal Group Chat Used to...
A Once-in-a-Lifetime Teachable Moment
Trump Just Announced That Your Tax Refund Is Going to Be Huge
Holocaust Remembrance Day: Not Just Memory — A Call to Moral Courage
OPINION

Time to Break Our ‘Addiction’ to Fossil Fuels?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

How many calories do you consume each day? If you answered something like “2,000” or “3,000,” you’re kidding yourself. You consume about 60 to 90 times that many.

Advertisement

True, you probably eat only 2,000 to 3,000 calories a day, but most of the calories you consume aren’t from food. They’re the energy you use when you turn on a light or computer, drive your car, use your cell phone, or do anything else requiring energy.

If you’re like the average American, you consume about 186,000 calories a day, and over 98% of it is machine energy. It serves you, minute by minute, day by day, uncomplaining. It is largely responsible, because it powers everything that makes us healthier and safer, for the fact that Americans born today can expect to live about 80 years—compared with under 30 before the Industrial Revolution.

Very few—perhaps 1 in 100—of our ancestors consumed that much energy in a day—mostly in the form of animal and slave labor. The animals and slaves got all their energy from food. Now we get most of our energy from fossil fuels (about 87% worldwide), and most of the remainder from hydro (7%) and nuclear (4%), and only 2% from wind, solar, geothermal, biomass, and biofuels combined.

Harnessing energy through machines instead of animals and slaves enables us to benefit from a level of energy consumption that only a tiny minority had three centuries ago—even while abolishing slavery.

Today, however, environmentalists, and politicians like President Obama, call our use of fossil fuels an “addiction” analogous to drug abuse. They warn that we’re causing dangerous global warming—though the computer models behind their claims predict two to three times the observed warming over the relevant period. They demand that we curtail our fossil fuel use—even stop it completely, even at a cost of trillions of dollars (over $100 trillion to eliminate fossil fuels by 2030) that we could use otherwise to reduce hunger and disease and increase housing, transportation, education, health care, and other benefits worldwide.

Advertisement

One might as well demand that someone cut his food intake from 2,000 calories a day to 300 because the other 1,700 are his “addiction.” Abundant, affordable, reliable energy is indispensable to lifting and keeping whole societies out of poverty, and fossil fuels are and for decades to come will remain our best source.

Contrary to Green-sponsored myth, we can burn oil, natural gas, and coal to generate energy, as we do in America, without causing harmful pollution levels. The wealthier a society gets—partly by energy from fossil fuels—the more it reduces pollution. Poor countries where biomass remains the main cooking and heating fuel for some 2 billion people, causing 2 to 4 million premature deaths and hundreds of millions of respiratory illnesses annually, desperately need this cleaner, affordable upgrade.

Time to break our “addiction” to fossil fuels? Far from it! Time to spread their use throughout the developing world, lifting billions out of poverty and into healthier, longer lives.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement